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Church ostiarius
Church ostiarius













church ostiarius

le Ryver held in villenage with him the said Monastery of Dale or Stanly Parc, three bovats of land, with the appurtenances in Trowelle one which Thomas son of Galsr. 6) Robert, son of Walter de Stretleg, for the health of his soul, and of all his Ancestors, and Successors, but especially for the soul of William de Dyve, gave to the said To that Crown, and were held by the Nuns of Sempringham, the family of Brunnesley, and 5) The other Mannors of the Tayns William Pevrel got, and so they were escheated Rent was returned to the Sacrist, of Stanly Parc, to buy wine for celebrating the Euchrist Him seven marks in a gross-sum, and by the consent of the Abbot and Covent the 11s. Hugh paid for four bovats of land in Trowelle, for which Sir Robert de Esseburne gave William son of Raph de Trowelle gave them the homage, and whole service of Hugh Balok of Trowell and his heirs, and the rent of 11s. Receive of him, for land which he held of him in Corsale, which he bought of Stephen 4) Hugh, son of Thomas de Corsale, with the yearly rent of 7s. Trowall and he likewise gave them towards their Pitance, the homage and service of He was wont to receive of William de Stanley, for two bovats which he held of him in Trouwelle which the homages and services of the Tenants, and with the woods of Estlound, and Broxhale and with the right of the Patronage of the moyety of the Church, There serving God, all the lands, and the rents of them which Richard his father held in Stanley Park (called Dale Abby) and the Canons of the Order of the Præmonstratenses 3) William son of Richard de Trowell gave to God, and the Church of St. Richard de Trowell paid for a knights fee here, in the former part of the reign of H. Philip de Kyme, and under him the family of Trowell, named in Stanford-on-Sore. 2) It seemeth that William Ostiarius his interest came to Mortimer, of whom held and two Acres of Meadow in the Confessours time this when the Conquerour made his Survey Eruvin had oneīord. William the Conquerour, and had there three Vill. Had, the land whereof was also four bovats, who still continued and held it of King This Mannor had been 10s.īut in the time of the survey, 14 W. The Conquest Alden had it, there was meadow two Acres. Of the land of the Taynes, three Mannors more, each of them answering the tax for halfĪ carucat: one of them was Ulchels, the land whereof was four bovats, and waste after 1) This was valued in the Confessours timeĪt 100s. Afterwards it became the fee of William Ostiarius, mentioned inīramcote, who had here one Car. The land was then found toīe twelve bovats. Who paid the Danegeld for it as one Carucat and an half. Similar eunuchs controlled access to lower ranking functionaries.The principal Mannor in this town, before the Norman Invasion, was Verebrands, In Byzantium, an ostiarius., or ostiarios in its Greek form, was a palace eunuch who controlled access to the Emperor or Empress.

church ostiarius

By 258CE (when St Romanus Ostiarius was martyred, the post was recognized - and by 377 ostiaries were recognized as the lowest of the Holy Orders of the Roman Catholic church, until they were abolished in 1972. When the early Christian church began to use buildings as churches, and to imitate the design of the basilica, they too employed ostiaries to guard the entrance and control admission.The basilicas of ancient Rome, the courts of justice, had ostiarii (the plural) who controlled access to the courts and judges. In ancient Rome, large households maintained a special slave, the ostiarius, to be in charge of the entrance - and indeed the entrants.(It gives rise, in the Late ] form ustiarius, to the modern English 'usher'.) (It is derived from Latin porta, 'door', via French porte. It has been regarded as an equivalent of 'porter' - for example, the servant who controls the entrance to the castle in Shakespeare's Macbeth. , such as a door or gate -which is itself derived from os, 'a mouth'. It is derived from Latin ostium, 'an opening'. Ostiarius is the Latin form of the English ostiary.















Church ostiarius