Catalogue description Petitioners: ? No Petitioner named Nature of Request: Writ of diem clausit...

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Details of SC 8/8/356B
Reference: SC 8/8/356B
Description:
Petitioners: ? No Petitioner named
Nature of request: Writ of diem clausit extremum addressed to the escheator, and the subsequent inquisition, which finds that John de Thorp held half the manor of Combs in Suffolk of the king in chief in free socage; and that his heir is his eldest son, Robert de Thorp, who is over thirty years of age.
Nature of endorsement: Inquisition examined by Henry de Edenestowe and master Adam de Ayremynne (on face).Coram rege (on dorse).This petition is to be delivered to the chancellor, and when the kings' serjeants and those of the council who seem necessary have been called before him, he is to do what is necessary according to law and reason (on dorse).
Places mentioned: Combs, Suffolk
People mentioned: Edward II, King of England; John de Blunvyle, king's escheator in Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire, Essex and Hertfordshire; John de Thorp; William Aleyn; Edward de Boytun; Robert de Thorp; Henry de Edenestowe; master Adam de Ayremynne
Note: The writ is dated to 1325 with the petition with which it was enclosed (SC 8/8/355). The writ is dated at Westminster, 20 May in the seventeenth year of the king's reign - 1324 - and the inquisition was held on 26 May in the same year. John de Thorp died on 16 May in the same year.
Date: [1325]
Related material:

For a related petition see SC 8/266/13299

For a related petition see SC 8/166/8299

For a related petition see SC 8/166/8298

For a related petition see SC 8/166/8297

A transcript of related certification of the exchequer is SC 8/8/356A

A related petition is SC 8/8/355

Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: Latin
Closure status: Open Document, Open Description
Publication note:

Rotuli Parliamentorum; ut et Petitiones, et Placita in Parliamento, vol. I, Edw I and Edw II, (Record Commission, 1783), p.420a, no.12 (full edition of a later copy of the original document)

The Parliament Rolls of Medieval England, Ed. Paul Brand, Anne Curry, Chris Given-Wilson, Rosemary Horrox, W.M. Ormrod and J.R.S. Phillips, (Cambridge University Press, 2005), Appendix of Unedited Petitions, 1307-1337, Rot. Parl. vol. I, pp. 416-429, no. 12 (summary of references)

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