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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 15:08:54 GMT
ccedb.cch.kcl.ac.uk/jsp/locations/index.jsp?locKey=6848CLERIC DETAIL Surname Silke Forename Thomas Title Mr Qualification University College Year EVENT TYPE Reason Death Date 14/9/1575 Office/Status Prebendary Clerical Status Location Bristol Cathedral/Prebend and canonry/Bristol OTHER INFORMATION Source LPL, Parker's Register (Register) Ordinary / Jurisdiction (Sede Vacante)/Canterbury Comment Vacancy of the sees of Canterbury and Bristol. Patron role supplied from original register. With stall, place in choir and voice in chapter. p.1182.
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 15:16:16 GMT
ccedb.cch.kcl.ac.uk/jsp/locations/index.jsp?locUnitKey=17306Thomas Sylke 1558 Appt (Institution) Rector Surname Sylke Forename Thomas Title Qualification MA University College Year EVENT TYPE Type Institution Date 26/3/1558 Office/Status Rector Clerical Status Location Cheryton Episcopi// CHERITON BISHOP OTHER INFORMATION Source Devon RO, Chanter 18 (Register) Ordinary / Jurisdiction Turberville, James/Exeter 1555-1559 Comment hide detailsPatron Details PATRON SUMMARY Patron Type Crown Patron Role own right Gender Mixed PATRON DETAILS Patron Surname Title Forename Gender Guardian Resid. Office Philip King Male Missing Mary Queen Female Missing
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 18:31:40 GMT
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 18:34:20 GMT
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 18:51:18 GMT
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 21:00:13 GMT
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 21:10:38 GMT
209.85.229.132/search?q=cache:QfTc28GC5JYJ:www.wishart.org/books/Life%2520of%2520George%2520Wishart.doc+sylke+vicar+st+leonards&cd=3&hl=en&ct=clnk&client=safariThe third letter is addressed to Thomas Sylke, Vicar of St Leonards; and as the writer demands that the reader should be set free before the bishop was informed of his detention, it was probably the first written. “To the stynkyng knave Sylke, Vykar of saynt Leonardes. “Thow stynkyng knave, I cast in a letter of late into thy chamber to delyver to the lying knave Thomas or Richard Abyngton, but thow lyke a knave, must delyver the letter to that knave Thomas Whyte. Be sure thow shalt lese one day, one of thy eares, & that ere it be myddell lent sonday. Remembre my sayng, I do write unto yow after a charitable maner that yow may delyver the reader ere the Byshoppe do knowe of it. For when he do heare of it he will ruffyll amonges yow for it. The knave Shrevys be a greate occasion of the same pore man the readers trowble, and specially that knave Harrye, the potecary. There is a nother knave Harrys 39 in towne, & that a pryvy and wily knave as ever lyved, crafty and suttyll, and a greate enemy to the worde of god: but when the Byshoppe do come, he shall handle hym in his kynde thowgh that the same knave Nicoll Thorne 40 do faver hym, he shall not helpe hym, nother that ypocrite his wife also. 0 yow hard-harted knavys that will not faver the worde of god, when such a faithfull yong man dyd take paynes to reade the trew worde of god and yow to trowble hym for his labor. May not yow be sory? yes trewly. And if yow had not delyvered hym owt of pryson the rather, he shold have come owt spyte of yor teth; like knavys as yow be all discharge his suretys, I will advise yow. Say not but yow have warning. For if the Poyntmakers 41 do ryse, some of yow will lese theyre eares and that shortly. I understande yow will do no thing tyll the knave Recorder do come. I do not mene my good lord pryvy seale. I do not call hym knave; but I call Davy Broke 42 knave and gorbely knave, and that droncken Gervys,43 that lubber Antony Payne,44 & slovyn William Yong,45 and that dobyll knave William Chester.46 For sometymes he is w’ us and sometymes w’ the knaves, but he shalbe a long knave for it, & his wife a folishe drabbe for she is the enemy of goddes worde. Fare yow well for his tyme, yor loving frende the goodman parson of saynt Stevyns, in Bedmyster, besydes the kynges towne of Faterford, commende me to all the knave preistes that be the enemys of goddes worde. For if we lyve & the byshoppe together, they shall not trowble this towne, except the kynge do fayle us. For the knavys have no lerning nor none will lerne. Yet onys again fare yow well. “By yor lovyer David Harrys, poticary, & that scalde knave William Fay, from the port of saynt Mary. “Commende me to that grynnyng knave the false towne clerke, he shall repent other thinges, yow knowe what I meane. Commende me to old folishe Sprynge,47 & to the angry Pykes,48 w. dyvers other which do not come to my mynde now, but another tyme beware mo of yow.
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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 22:32:04 GMT
CANONS OF THE 5TH PREBEND, BRISTOL www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=35309Thomas Silke M.A. 1546-1575. Pres. by king 5 June 1546 (L. & P. XXI i nos. 1165 (8), 1166 (31)). D. by 13 Sept. 1575 (C.P.R. 1572-5 no. 2886; Reg. Parker III 1153, 1181).
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